BRUDDBAND LEAVES TANGNEY IN THE OUTERNET
Dr JENSEN (Tangney) (9:36 AM) —My electorate of Tangney is not poor by
any means. Indeed, it includes a couple of the most established and
affluent riverfront suburbs in Perth, as well as many more with a
demographic that could be said to be solidly middle to upper middle
class. My electorate is not remote by any measure, with most of my
constituents living only several kilometres from the CBD—a short drive
along the freeway which cuts through the middle of my electorate. It
also includes the well-respected and very large Murdoch University. Not
surprisingly then, the level of demand for internet service in my
electorate is extremely high. And given all of the above, it is
becoming increasingly obvious that delivery of internet services to the
area is woefully inadequate. The federal government has taken pains to
outline a grand vision for high-speed data links to almost every home
in the country. But promises of what might be, which strike most as
mere pipedreams at that, resonate emptily with citizens who are being
denied even basic internet service because of complete disinterest
demonstrated by the Prime Minister and his communications minister.
Being told of the great possibilities of high-speed links means little
to those with no speed. The potential of the information superhighway
is superfluous to those who cannot even enter the on-ramp. In the
long-established suburb of Booragoon, constituents have told me that
they are unable to access any ADSL services, let alone higher speed
connections available elsewhere. Their only option, they say, is to pay
for wireless services, which, as most of us should know, can be
prohibitively expensive. In Canning Vale, a relatively new suburb with
a high proportion of young professional families, many residents enjoy
below-ground services cables for utilities and even television, which
is quite unusual in Perth, but are told that they may only have dial-up
internet access because some of the area’s hardware has not been
upgraded from the days before development, when it hosted small,
semirural properties and not much else.
Similar complaints
pour in from around the electorate, so the announcements proudly made
by members opposite on the future national broadband network are met
with despair by many in my electorate. The $43 billion plan should one
day, several years down the track, give access to services most
citizens of developed countries already take for granted. The
government apparently does not care about this. Why else would it
ignore these complaints as it ploughs on with a $43 billion broadband
scheme? That money would pay for the equivalent of four Snowy Mountain
schemes today. Whatever happened to the new broadband services promised
by 2008? Whatever happened to the $20 million spent by this incompetent
government on the disastrous National Broadband Network tender process,
which ultimately collapsed? This is a government of no substance and of
no hope.